Pubdate: Sun, 20 Feb 2000 Source: Salt Lake Tribune (UT) Copyright: 2000 The Salt Lake Tribune Contact: 143 S Main, Salt Lake City UT 84111 Fax: (801)257-8950 Website: http://www.sltrib.com/ Forum: http://www.sltrib.com/tribtalk/ Author: LUBNA KHAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RESIDENTIAL 'MOM AND POP' METH LABS WORRY POLICE In their war on methamphetamine, Utah lawmakers have approved measures to limit the sale of the chemicals used to make the relatively cheap and highly addictive drug. But the effort could end up as a case study in another law: the law of unintended consequences. There is evidence that the tougher laws have driven down the purity of imported Mexican meth. Law enforcement officials say that may boost the number of "mom and pop" labs in residential neighborhoods. The federal Drug Enforcement Administration says nearly one meth lab a day is discovered in Utah. "These chemical controls hurt the big guys. They don't hurt the small guys so much, because they can buy smaller amounts -- enough to feed their habit, sell to a couple of friends and make enough to buy more (chemicals) to start all over," said Guy Hargreaves, a DEA meth expert in Washington, D.C. Nationally, meth purity has dropped from 60.5 percent in 1995 to 27.2 percent last year, according to the DEA. That indicates large-scale producers aren't getting the chemicals they need to make pure meth. "From the DEA's perspective that's a success, but from the perspective of local law enforcement, it's a nightmare," Hargreaves said. "The Achilles heel is that a heroin addict can't make his own heroin, a cocaine addict can't make his own cocaine, but the meth addict can make his own meth." Meth is a powerful stimulant that can be made using ingredients such as pseudoephedrine (found in cold medicines), hydrochloric acid, iodine, rock salt, drain cleaner and lighter fluid. Also known as crank, it sells for about $100 a gram, a little less than the going rate for cocaine. But the meth high is more intense and lasts up to 10 times longer. For less than $20 a user can get high. "It's a better value," said Donald Mendrala, agent in charge of the DEA's Salt Lake City office. "That's why it's called the poor man's cocaine . . . You can get everything you need to make meth from 7-Eleven and Wal-Mart." Utah DEA agents seized 266 meth labs in 1999. Almost all of them were small operations, Mendrala said. DEA officials caution that the tougher laws could have the opposite effect -- forcing smaller labs out of business. That, in turn, could create a larger market for Mexican imports, Mendrala said. But that's not necessarily bad, he said. The DEA already has been tracking the cocaine cartel for years, and the meth trade likely would piggyback on the same network of dealers and middlemen that move cocaine into the United States. "That's the kind of thing we're equipped to handle," Mendrala said. And that's the scenario local officials are hoping for, said Capt. Kevin Youngberg, a drug investigator with the Utah Department of Public Safety. "The biggest problem that I'm having with meth labs is that they're in every neighborhood, and that means a higher risk of explosions, of fires, of children being exposed to fumes, of chemical pollution," Youngberg said. "If we can get the domestic production down and deal with importation, at least we don't have the labs happening in our neighborhoods." Drug enforcement officials are counting on new legislation and public awareness campaigns to combat neighborhood meth labs. The Utah Council for Crime Prevention has launched "What's Cooking in Your Neighborhood," a campaign to have people turn in their neighbors who may be running meth labs. Under a 1997 Utah law, individuals cannot possess more than 12 grams of ephedrine products. And it is unlawful for anyone to supply a precursor chemical if there is cause to think it will be used to produce meth. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg